Change Overdue Board Underscores 'U' Athletic Neet :'N0 MATTER WHAT THE METHODS used to study life in the quadrangle, they would uncover substantially the same criticisms conveyed in the Survey of Student Opinion in East Quadrangle. As both the students who were interviewed and the staff who evaluated the in- terviews charge, life in the quadrangles is too often a negative experience. Freshmen who come to the University expecting to enjoy their stay in the residence halls soon are discour- aged by the rules which confront them at every turn. Those who might desire to press for changes are deterred by the inaction which follows recommendations to resi- dent advisers by house councils and to the administra- tion by quad councils and the Inter-Quadrangle Coun- cil. Action on an individual level seems almost absurd by contrast. The lack of communication between the residence hall staff men and the administration renders any com- munication between students and staff men ineffective, whether or not the latter agree. Frustrated by this com- munication break-dowri and its resultant, inaction, stu- dents may turn to more drastic measuressuch as food riots and panty raids to make themselves heard. Given an environment which they perceive as un- changable-arbitrary regulations, Business Office ethics, institutional food, the unfulfilled need for individual and small group privacy--men tend to prefer a mass escape from the quads each year, rather than an attempt to alter atmosphere. THE IMPROPER CONSbERATION of the report by the administration in itself validates the claim that the University is not making a proper attempt either to study the residence hall problems or to do anything about the ones brought to their attention. The report was given to the assistant dean of men in charge of residence halls last spring, but it got no further. Why didn't a report compiled by staff men, raising questions critical to the system, reach the stu- dent government and all administragors concerned with the quadrangles? We appreciate Herbert Sigman's concern with the neglect of this report, and his courage in bringing criti- cism of the quadrangles to public attention. Whether or not the study's methods were "scientif- ic," the University cannot continue to ignore the explicit and implicit unhappiness with the residence halls shown in it. We suggest that the Student Relations Commit- tee of the University Senate, as well as the Office of Student Affairs, follow the Inter-Quadrangle Council's inquiry. The light this report throws upon quadrangle living has been obscured for almost a year. Fast and full action now is mandatory. --THE SENIOR EDITORS Legislature Receives Education Proposal Measure Would Create Committee To Aid State College Coordination A modified form of Gov. John B. Swainson's proposal for a state council on higher education was introduced in the State Legislature Thursday. The bill asks the establishment bf a 17-member council com- posed of representatives from state college and university boards, community and private colleges, private citizens appointed by the governor and the superintendent of public instruction to coordinate 4 the policies of the state's icolleges By TOM WITECKI Daily Sports Editor The Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics made public a well-acknowledged fact yesterday-the University badly needs a multi- purpose facility to house several of its athletic teams. In its annual report to the Regents, the board said: "For the past several years the major concern of the board with regard to our physical plant has been the pressing need for a multi- purpose building that will meet certain long-standing athletic needs and also serve a variety of useful purposes in numerous non-athletic activities of the University." A special committee of the Board has intensively studied this subject and a preliminary report from that committee was forwarded to the Regents in. February. Regents Take Report Vice-President for University Relations Lyle Nelson said the Regents looked over the report and it is now in the hands of Wilbur Pierpont, vice-president for business and finance. "There is no question about the need for such a facility. It is just the question of other needs and most important, the financing of the project," Nelson said. The athletic department's use for such a building has been ap- parent for several years, although it has not been well-publicized. Yost Fleldhouse, for instance, is one of the poorest places in the Conference in which.to watch a basketball game. Its capacity is listed at 9,000, but when the number of spectators rises above the five or six thousand mark, many spectators have a very poor vantage point. Poor for Recruiting In addition, the fieldhouse is definitely not a good selling point as far as recruiting goes. If basketball coach Dave Strack were to succeed in making Michigan a fairly respectable basketball school, he almost certainly would need an impressive facility to attract talented prospects. The proposed building presumably would contain facilities that could be used by the hockey team. Although the Ice Coliseum is not quite so outdated as the fieldhouse, it lacks space in the arena itself (its capacity is 3,500) and in its "lobby." Besides basketball and hockey, an indoor track will be needed to' replace the present one in the fieldhouse. Some Conference teams have refused to run on the antiquated track. Thus, Michigan is pre- vented from holding several attractive dual meets as well as the annual Conference indoor meet. Although it is not certain just exactly what the building will contain, there is a chance it also might provide improved facilities wrestling and gymnastics. The proposed multi-purpose building also would provide a num of important services for the non-athletic sphere of the Univers community. For instance, Nelson said, it would be an ideal locat for mid-year graduation exercises and also for spring exercises wh inclement weather prohibits use of the football stadium. In addition, the building, which will probably contain an are seating anywhere from 12,000 to 20,000, could be used for jazz a popular music concerts. Non-Athletic Need Summing up the non-athletic need for the building, Nelson add "At present we don't have a really adequate place for large stud( gatherings. Even Hill. Auditorium is becoming too small for freshm orientation gatherings." The big problem, as Nelson put it, is financing such a structu A building of this size, with several of the proposed-facilities, wo run well up into the millions of dollars. The Regents have asked the board to submit a five-year proj tion of its revenues and expenses. The athletic department, whi See BOARD, Page 6 Str itrna Seventy Years of Editorial Freedom SIX PAGES VOL LXXI, No. 118 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 1961 PHI DE-LT THET SUSPE OS u I1 Lake Forest Group Seeks Court Order BULLETIN IOWA CITY OP)-The State University of Iowa chapter of Delta Chi social fraternity has pledged a Negro member for the first time in its history at the school. The new pledge, a member of the freshman basketball team, was the first Negro pledged by a white fraternity there, a university official said. Delta Chi has no bias clause, but it is unknown whether any chapter has ever before pledged a Negro. By MICHAEL OLINICK Faced with a possible court, fight, Phi Delta Theta suspend- ed its Lake Forest chapter until the 1962 fraternity convention, members of the local announced last night. The suspension came Wednes- day morning after the Illinois Theta chapter said it would re- pledge a Jewish student the na- tional ordered dropped from mem- bership. The local group voted early yes- terday morning to continue thea action they outlined Wednesday. This includes preparing to seek a court injunction preventing the' national from revoking or sus- pending its charter. Suspension Confirmed Larry McClain, Phi Delt presi- dent at Lake Forest, said that Jack Shepman visited the chap- ter house Tuesday night to con- firm the suspension. Shepman was a member of the five man national council that or- dered the depledging of Donald Schiller last month on grounds; that he was not a Christian. National Silent Phi Delts' national executive secretary Robert Miller would+ neither deny nor affirm that the suspension action was taken. "A statement may be forthcoming+ later, but right now things are' just too transitory and unclear."+ The suspension means that the Lake Forest chapter can not ini- tiate or pledge anyone until a year from this summer. The con- vention delegates can extend the suspension, expel the chapter or reinstate it. * * * * * * * * *. Regents Agree to Prooa Athletic Board Attacks NCAA Rules Power By BRIAN MacCLOWRY The Board in Control of Inter- collegiate Athletics 'yesterday leveled a blast at the National Collegiate Athletic Association for what it termed the NCAA's grow- ing tendency to usurp the author- ity of individual schools and con- ferences. The board said it was "gravely concerned" about the NCAA's "new and portentious general course," which is moving towards gaining control of eligibility rules governing "all intercollegiate ath- letic contests that an institution might engage in during the year." "We are gravely 'concerned that the NCAA is getting into this type of regulation," the board said in the report accepted by the Regents at their meeting yesterday. Reply to Amendment The criticism was the board's reply to an amendment to the NCAA cpnstitution adopted at the association's 1961 convention in Pittsburgh. The amendment stated'that the NCAA should' have authority to legislate concerning "basic ath- letic issues such as admissions, financial aid, eligibility and re- cruiting." Such regulation by the NCAA, the 'board said, would cause ex- treme complication in the admin- istration of athletics, and added that "national rules often do not take into account local conditions and ways of doing things." The board's report questioned the ability of the NCAA to effec- tively enforce "a set of eligibility rules throughout the United States without building up a tremendous bureaucracy. Eligibility Rules and universities. Swainson's pro- posal had been for a 21-member group which would also include representatives from the Legisla- ture. Legislatures were not in- cluded in the bill proposed Thurs- day. Local legislators had received the governor's proposal cautiously while admitting the need for greater coordination of higher education on the state level. Sen. Stanley Thayer (R-Ann Arbor) had pointed out that the proposed council would not be a "panacea" for the state's educa- tion problems and that many problems could be solved by the governing boards of the individual institutions. Rep. Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) said the council might have merit in planning a "long- range plan" for the educational needs of the state. He called for a 10-year blue- print forecasting enrollment poli- cies necessary to meet the impact of the increasing number of young people seeking a college education. The bill was introduced in the state Senate by Sen. Patrick Doyle (D-Dearborn). For ' Regent asks For Leaves Discussion of the large number of sabbatical leaves requested from the Regents this month, prompted the suggestion by Regent Donald Thurber of Detroit that adminis- tration sabbaticals be granted. 'There is something to be said for this," he affirmed in dismissing the chuckling reception which his proposal met. Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss ex- plained that administrators do not have tenure (that is, the guaran- tee of sabbaticals and retirement benefits after a certain number of years service to the University). However, Niehuss promised to look into the matter at Thurber's insistence and present a report on it in the future. Bias Denied By Scientist WASHINGTON W) - The Sen- ate Internal Serurity Subcom- mittee yesterday accused Prof. Linus Pauling of the University of California, a Nobel prize-winning chemist, of displaying "a consis- tent pro-Soviet bias." In Cleveland, Pauling told a convention audience here tonight that if the senators will waive congressional immunity, he will sue them, "I am not even a theoretical Marxist,' Pauling said. The Senate committee accused Pauling of associating with and aiding the Communist cause in America. U00, Ws 'SOME VALUE': East Quad Staff View Report The scope and value of the stu- dent survey on quadrangle condi- tions released publicly this week evoked discussion yesterday from three East Quadrangle staff men who helped compile the report. John Taylor, East Quad direc- tor, said the 181-page document had "some limited value to staff who kept in mind what and who were studied." Taylor said the answers and criticisms levelled by 40 East Quad residents in interviews held last spring would not aid the educa- tional staff of the other two mens' residence halls. He claimed the answers would not be helpful be- cause the population is different in each residence hall. Different Groups "You can't survey the people of Chaicago about their problems and expect the same criticisms to hold in Pittsburgh," he explained. Taylor cited his close relation to the gathering of materials for the survey. "The report was done by Harold Scheub (then resident adviser in Anderson House) under my direction. He cleared all the questions and the procedures of interviewing with me. The quad director emphasized that the study was made mainly for use by the staff. "They took what they could out of it and used it to improve the quadrangle. This was the purpose of the survey." Questions Methods He claimed the report also could not be used extensively because the methodology behind it was "highly questionable in objectivity and validity." Warren Eagle, '61L, resident ad- visor of Cooley House, also worked with Scheub in drawing up the report. He thought the report would be used "constructively." He agreed with Taylor that the intention was not to recommend changes that would apply in South and West Quads, but "to examine the policies and problems of our own residence hall." Special Living Unit Eagle stressed that the quad- rangles are one type of living unit and must examine what benefits they can offer the University stu- dents. "Whatever we're offering, we've got to make it available in the best way we can. Such a study can help. "The thing that bothers me most is the attitude that the system has them beat. If they knew that things were being done, attitude would be better." Another resident advisor, Ray Tanis, Grad., of Prescott House, claimed the survey was not given the recognition "it should have gotten." Much Work He traced the long hours of work and discussion that went into the report and the "many Board Seeks Further Study Of SGC Letter The Regents yesterday acknow- ledged receipt of a letter from Student Government Council pro-. posing establishment of a Con- ference on the University, and re- ferred the matter to the Office for Student Affairs. Students, faculty and adminis- trators would participate in the weekend meeting to try to explore methods for improving the Uni- versity., The Regents expressed interest in the proposal, but had not had sufficient time to carefully con- sider it. A report is expected from the student affairs office on de- velopment of the plans. Regent Eugene Power of Ann Arbor warned that the idea may have been formulated too late for this semester, but the University should still hold the conference in tne fall, if the spring is too early. 'U' Proposes.Novel really dedicated resident advisers who have studied student views on many occasions." Tanis saw value in the wider use of the report which might go beyond a listing of specific com- plaints. "The report is mainly a reiteration of gripes we have heard before. "It points out, however, the 'big picture.' It shows the, general trends and'patterns of quadrangle needs that can be concluded from a general cross section of student opinion." Court Requires, New Districts In Legislature INDIANAPOLIS (R) - A Mar- ion County jutge ruled yesterday that the Indiana General Assembly is an illegal and powerless body because it has disobeyed constitu- tional mandates to repportion it- self. State Atty. Gen. Edwin K. Steers immediatedly advised the affected state lawmakers to await court decisions on laws they may pass in future to determine the effect of the ruling. Judge John F. Linder of Super- ior Court 5 issued the decision in a suit filed by state Sen. Nelson G. Grills (D-Indianapolis) which attacked the validity of the elec- tion of 23 state senators, including himself, in 1958. Linder Aeld that the legislature's failure to reapportion violates both the Indiana and United States . Constitutions and said: "Members of the General Assem- bly attempting to serve after the date of this judgment are with- out de facto authority to act." Angotans Riot, Kill Settlers LUANDA, Angola (Portuguese West Africa) (P') - A series of bloody anti-white uprisings by machete-wielding Negroes since Wednesday morning has killed, mutilated and wounded a number of plantation settlers near the Congo borders. (Portuguese agency reports For Classes At Each Unit Schools To Exchange Full Credits, Grades, Progress Reports By MICHAEL BURNS The Regents yesterday approv- a plan to allow selected students at both Wayne State University and the University to elect courses at either institution without pay- ment of additional fees. The plan, approved by WSU's governing board Wednesday, wil become effective immediately. The plan will be restricted to advancedand specialized stu- dents, with the permission of thi individual departments and schooli at both institutions. Economics Program First Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss ex- plained that the economcis de- partment had started the Uni- versity on the program when it investigated the possibility of ex- changing certain courses with WSU. Grade credits, progress reportc and other pertinent data will be reported to the university in whici the student is enrolled ,ormer ly, a grade credit above "C" giv- en by any school was transferred to the University as a "C.") Harold M. Dorr, dean of state- wide education, will supervise thi program at the University, Long-Term Study Niehuss, presiding in the. ab- sence of University President Har- lan Hatcher, who was in Lexing- ton, Ky., attending lhis sister', funeral, said the move was the result of several years of meet- ings between the -two universities He said it would provide "a broader opportunity for. a student to take advantage of the educa- tional facilities at the other insti- tution." Regent Eugene Power of An Arbor said the agreement was i step along the road to increased cooperation between the schools. 'Unique Programs' "We must do more of this with in the state," he emphasized. Pow- er said the plan would allow eaci individual schools to follow it own "unique program." Regent Donald Thurber of Detroit agreed with Power's statements. Niehuss saw no need for a state coordinator to handle this type o i~t~r~istit4 inna .naam .o ial- Joint Study -Plan Allows i , , ., _ FRICKE TABULATES DATA: Test Analyzes, College Success Potential By HARRY PERLSTADT A University professor is cur- rently analyzing the results of a test which "may make a major contribution to higher education and campus counseling by predict- ing success in college and aiding in vocational guidance." The test, which was devised by Prof. Benno G. Fricke of the psy- chology department, indicates a student's motivation for success. "By contrasting the responses :-f ings are obtained on a variety of traits. Prof. Fricke found that students who do well academically usually obtain a higher motivation for success ranking than students of the same tested ability with low grade point averages. Some people may have the ne- cessary ability but lack the drive and other personal attributes which lead to success. For ex- ample. there are janitors with high IQ's but who lack the drive sophomore counselor, had the freshmen list their preferences for different fields of endeavor. The opinion, attitude and interest sur- very compares the student to those who have already entered these fields. "Some other tests are so ob- vious that they do not tell the students anything but merely re- peat what he is willing to say. This new test gives information of which the student often is not _... -4